2B - September 9, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Five things we learned: Notre Dame By ZACH HELFAND Daily Sports Editor This week, we learned Beyon- ce is a Michigan fan, Eminem is a weirdo and Athletic Director Dave Brandon really likes fly- overs. There was also a pretty good football game going on. Here are five other things we learned this week: 1. This offense is dynamic. Yes, Michigan coach Brady Hoke loves his Michigan tra- ditions, but so far, only the productive ones. That means the conservative, punt-happy approach is gone. Gone too, is the three-yards-and-a-cloud-of-dust offense of Michigan's past. Mich- igan would love to run the ball up the middle, but not to the point of being stubborn. Take Saturday. Notre Dame had a behemoth nose tackle clog- ging the middle. So Michigan took the fight to the edge. That's not rocket science, but the game plan showcased Michigan's ver- satility. In only the second week with a new offense, the Wolver- ines showed they have a deep playbook. In the first drive alone, Michi- gan used a reverse, a double- reverse and quick pitches to the outside. Later on, offensive coor- dinator Al Borges used the pistol formation, the traditional I-for- mation and the shotgun. There were runs up the gut, stretch plays to the edge, strong play- action fakes and a sprinkling of read option. This was arguably one of the best games called by Borges in his time at Michigan. Last year, Borges was criticized at times for predictability. Against Nebras- ka, his play calls displayed an unmistakable pattern. Against Ohio State, the Buckeyes knew what play would be run based on where Denard Robinson lined up. Could Borges have been bet- ter? Probably. But he had few other options. Now he's got the full complement of players. Gardner hit Gallon on a back- shoulder pass in tight cover- age. Gallon knew where the ball would be before he turned around. On his second touch- down catch, he used his body to shield the defender and make a diving catch. He'll command extra atten- tion on the outside, or he'll burn opponents for it. 3. The defense can use more playmakers. First the good: Michigan held Notre Dame to a respectable 23 points and limited big plays. The longest gain for Notre Dame on the game was 23 yards. No back had a run longer than 16 yards. That was the game plan. Red- shirt sophomore cornerback Blake Countess said the defense knew Notre :Dame quarterback Tommy Rees liked to air out the ball. He could exploit man cover- age with long fades. So Michigan played loose. The plan worked and Michi- gan won, but this was more bend-but-don't-break than over- powering dominance. Notre Dame hardly ran, but when they did it was alarmingly effective. The top two Fighting Irish backs averaged 5.3 and 7.4 yards a rush. A cornerback, junior Raymon Taylor, led the team in tackles. Thomas Gordon, a safety, was second. More concerning was the lack of big defensive plays. Sure, Countess had the two game- changing interceptions, but the first was a bad pass, and the sec- ond hit off Taylor's leg. The Wol- verines need to force the issue more. They didn't do that on Satur- day. They had one sack and only one hurry. The hurry was pro- vided by junior defensive end Frank Clark, who's still search- ing for his first sack of the season. He's only two weeks in, but he's already behind on his prediction of double-digit sacks. For all the talk coming out of camp about how formidable Clark is as a rusher, he looks not much off the Clark of 2012. That's still a pretty good player to have on the end, but he admitted he has plenty of room for improvement. The defense does too. 4. The rotation behind Tous- saint doesn't really matter. Fitzgerald Toussaint was the undisputed No. 1 running back entering the season, but he had a stable of five eager backs behind him who looked like they could steal some carries. Freshman Derrick Green, the highly-touted recruit, especially looked like he could challenge Toussaint for the starting job. But Toussaint was the workhorse Saturday. He rushed 22 times for 83 yards. Green was the only other running back with a carry. He lost a yard. Toussaint didn't have a career performance, but he showed patience and vision. He turned losses into gains. And more importantly, he has the trust of his coaches. 4 5. Bold prediction: Michigan will be 9-0 heading into North- western. OK, this has as much to do with what we learned about Michigan State and Nebraska as it does Michigan. But Notre Dame is likely the toughest team Michigan will face until Ohio State, and the Wolverines were clearly the better team: Meanwhile, Michigan State's offense is offensive. Even on the road, Michigan could be favored. Nebraska could give the Wolver- ines trouble, but the game is at home, where Hoke is undefeated. A game at Penn State will be dif- ficult, but Michigan is more tal- ented. Don't be surprised if Michigan is favored from here until at least Nov. 16. And don't be surprised if they're undefeated heading into that game, too. Tg TAMOL d s sFF/aily fifth'year senior running back Fitzgerald Teussaint had 22 carries fsr 71 yards. He has established himself as the workhorse. Redshirt junior quarterback Devin Gardner could be a tra- ditional drop-back passer. He finished with 294 yards and four touchdowns. Route com- binations can be more complex with him as the passer. But his legs add a new wrinkle, one that allows the read-option to remain. It is especially potent in the red zone and on third downs. The playbook is wide open. And Michigan's offense has sel- dom looked this dynamic. 2. Gallon is even better than we thought. Can we put to rest the argu- ment that Michigan doesn't have any weapons on the outside? Fifth-year senior wide receiver Jeremy Gallon is one. That much is glaringly obvious. Gallon had eight catches Saturday for 184 yards and three touchdowns. It was one of Michigan's best receiving performances in recent memory. Since Gardner took over at quarterback, Gallon has been Michigan's receptions leader in every single game. Taking Gal- lon's seven-game totals with Gardner as the passer, he'd be on pace for 80 receptions, 13 touch- downs and nearly 1,400 yards over a full 13-game season. That's notjust a weapon on the outside. That would make him the best wide receiver in the Big Ten. Gallon, who is listed at 5-foot- 8, has long been overlooked because of his size. Notre Dame inexplicably left him open across the middle of the field again, and he torched them for a 61-yard touchdown. But he is just as dangerous in traffic. In the second quarter, Lexi duo continues to dominate By ERIN LENNON sweep of the Big Ten/Pac-12 Chal- point late in the set, senior outside Daily Sports Writer lenge. hitter Molly Toon took a ball from Following a 16-11 surge from the backcourt deep into Oregon's There it was: the 2012 national Michigan in the first set, the corner to knot the game at 19. semifinalistbanner. Ducks were forced to call their From there, Cross added a kill off As the No. 7Michiganvolleyball first timeout. After two ensuing a pass from sophomore libero Tif- team unveiled its first-ever Final Oregon attack errors and a second fany Morales, who finished with Four flag atop Cliff Keen Arena on timeout, the Wolverines saw their 17 digs, to put the Wolverines up Saturday afternoon, the season's 19-13 lead become a 21-20 deficit. for the last time as they went on to objective stared senior co-captain But two blocks from senior middle steal the second set, 25-22. outside hitter Lexi Erwin in the blocker and co-captain Jennifer Down 3-0 early in the third face as she delivered the first serve Cross gave Michigan a 25-22 vic- set, Michigan scored six straight against No. 12 Oregon. tory. Cross finished the afternoon points to secure the lead. Up 9-5, Three sets later, the Wolver- with eight kills and three stuffs. the Ducks would come to within ines (5-0) inched one step closer to There were 14 ties and nine lead one point of the Wolverines before that goal, comoleting a two-match changes in the second set. Down a freshman middle blocker Abby Cole connected for a kill off of the slide. The point was followed by a service ace from Toon, and Michi- gan never looked back. Oregon called two timeouts but couldn't come any closer than 10-9 as the Wolverines added 10 more kills to secure a fourth straight-set vic- tory on the season, 25-21. Following the win, the Wol- verines - with graduated middle blocker Claire McElheny at their side - headed over to the Big House, where they were hon- ored once more by the Michigan football team for their Final Four appearance. "I don't think we necessarily want to focus on the past, but we certainly want to honor the past," said Michigan coach Mark Rosen. "The banner was sort of one last honor of last year, and now we'll focus on this year." The Wolverines began the opening weekend with another dominant, four-set victory over Oregon State. Michigan hit .460 in the first two sets against the Beavers en route to a 2-0 advantage heading into the third set. In the first set, Erwin added six of her 13 kills, including a final swing to put the Wolverines up 23-16 before two Oregon State errors put Michigan up 1-0. A 5-0 service rally from Cross - who finished the game with 11 kills and two blocks - was followed by six straight serves from Toon which gave the Wolverines an easy 25-14 win in the second set. But after 12 ties and seven lead changes in the third set, Michi- gan dropped its first and only set of the season after 11 consecutive victories. Cole put the Wolver- ines up 12-9 early, but the Beavers answered with an 8-2 run. Tied at 19, Cole contributed yet another kill, while Erwin gave Michigan. a 21-20 advantage, two critical attack errors pushed the 25-22 score in favor of Oregon State. "I don't think we lost our com- posure, but coming in after that I think we played like a Michigan -, S FILE PHOTO/Daily ills against Oregon State on Friday. high. The freshman also contrib- uted a team-high 13 kills in just three sets on Saturday. "(Cole) is a great learner, she's very humble and she just keeps progressing," Rosen said. "The best thing about Abby is that she's nowhere close to as good as she's going to be. As a coach, nothing is more exciting than that." Added Cole: "I'm excited. ... I just think the transitioning has been so easy just because of my teammates and the coaches." Senior outside hitter Lexi Erwin had 13 k team plays," Cole said. Dannemiller served the last nine points of the match en route to a 25-13 set win and the victory. If Cole started her first colle- giate home match with a few jit- ters, she didn't finish with any. Instead, the Michigan native completed her first game with a season-high 16 kills while con- tributing nine of the Wolverines 11 blocks - besting sophomore middle blocker Krystalyn Goode's eight blocks to set a new team